Hamburg Journal May 2018

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May calendars for: Business, Kids, Health, Seniors Home & Garden Inside

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MAY 2018

all about Meet Ellen Calipari and other moms in our neighborhood.

Real Estate News page 22


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COVER STORY: TEAM MOM........................................................... 8 SPALDING’S BAKERY.....................................................................10 MOTHERS DAY EATS.....................................................................11 ALL ABOUT THE KIDS....................................................................12 HEALTH NEWS AND EVENTS.......................................................14 SENIOR EVENTS.............................................................................16 CALENDAR OF EVENTS................................................................18 HOME AND GARDEN....................................................................21 REAL ESTATE.............................................................................22-23

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BUSINESS UPDATES questions: How can we attract the best of the best to Kentucky? How can Lexington be seen on a global stage? Are you putting your best foot forward?

WEDNESDAY MAY 9 NEWS

The downtown development known as CentrePointe has changed its name to City Center. Target plans to open its first smallformat store in Kentucky near UK’s campus. The store is anticipated to open in the summer of 2019. It will be located on the ground floor of an apartment complex set to be built in the former parking lot next to Raising Cane’s on Limestone.

WEDNESDAY MAY 2

“News and Brews: Lexington: The next Silicon Valley?” hosted by Alltech will be on May 2 at 6 pm at the Town Branch Distillery. This month ask the

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TUESDAY MAY 15

Ryan Quarles, Commissioner of the Kentucky Department of Agriculture, will headline the May 15th Public Policy Luncheon presented by Kentucky American Water at the Hyatt Regency in downtown Lexington from Noon to 1:30 pm.

SUNDAY MAY 20

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PETS

May 2018 | 5

SATURDAY MAY 5

On May 5, celebrate the Kentucky Derby with Southern Barker. They are hosting a special Derby Hat Competition where winners will be crowned for Best Overall, Most Creative, and Best Derby Hat Duo.

WEDNESDAY MAY 9

Brighton Animal Clinic offers Intro to Agility Classes from 6:30-7:30 pm every Wednesday in May. Dogs must be 10 months or older and must have taken a group basic obedience class prior.

THURSDAY MAY 10

Lexington pets can get a low-cost rabies shot. The Lexington-Fayette County Health Department’s annual Rabies Vaccination Clinic will be held 6-9 pm on May 10, at Castlewood Park. All cats must be in a carrier, and all dogs must be on leashes. In the event of inclement weather, the clinic date is subject to change.

SATURDAY MAY 12

On May 12 at 7 pm, save the date for PAWHIBITION 2018 - an evening of Roaring 20s elegance benefiting Paws 4 the Cause. Head to Most Valuable Pets from 11 am to 4 pm for the 17th Annual Hamster Derby. Enjoy beach volleyball, Honey Hill Farms petting zoo, tie dye t-shirt stands, and more activities.

WEDNESDAY MAY 16

The Bluegrass Classic Stockdog Trial will be held at Masterson Station Park on May 16-20. Families and spectators are invited to bring their own dogs. The event runs continuously from dawn until dusk and there are spectator raffles, lunchtime concessions, numerous vendors and cold drinks available.

Fido Fest. The event celebrates fluffy friends and benefits Lexington Humane Society. Enjoy a pet selfie station, kid-friendly activities, food, retail vendors, and live entertainment by Bent Penny Band. Central Kentucky Veterinary Center in Georgetown, KY hosts Festival of the Pet on Saturday, May 19 from 1 pm to 4 pm. Celebrate your pets and enjoy a day filled with fun, food, and much more.

THURSDAY MAY 24

Bluegrass Dog Sports hosts their May trial at Black Barn Winery, May 24 - May 28.

FRIDAY MAY 25

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On May 25, Southern Barker in Hamburg hosts a “Paint Pawty” with Crafty N’ Blessed.

SATURDAY MAY 26

Run, walk, and wag at the 2018 Woodford Wag on May 26. Sign up for the 5K cross country race or the 2K dog walk and enjoy the trails around Falling Springs Park in Versailles. This event benefits Woodford Humane Society. For safety reasons, dogs are not allowed on the 5K course. On May 26, from noon to 5 pm, join Pet Wants Lex and special guest Carrie Kenady for pet psychic readings.

THURSDAY MAY 31

Whitaker Bank Ballpark hosts Pepsi Bark in the Park on May 31. Bring out your four-legged furry dog friend of yours and watch the Legends take on West Virginia Power baseball to benefit a local animal non-profit.

SATURDAY MAY 19

From 11 am to 3 pm, stop by the Summit at Fritz Farm for the first annual

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6 | May 2018

NEIGHBORHOOD NEWS Hamburg Journal presents cover posters to FDHS teachers Jessica Greene and Coach Brian Landis

MetroNet is wrapping up construction of the first quadrant of its citywide fiberoptic network. This is the first phase in Lexington’s attempt to become the nation’s largest gigabit city. The wider availability of gigabit service could help accelerate and expand tech-related companies and entrepreneurs business capabilities, particularly with video streaming and other data-intensive applications. Neighborhoods east of downtown and north of Richmond Road, in the area from East New Circle Road to I-75, will be the first to come online.

HAMBURGJOURNAL.COM During the 14th Annual Best Places to Work in Kentucky awards ceremony nearly 1,300 attendees joined in celebrating the 100 Kentucky companies who were recognized for their commitment to focus, measure and move their workplace environments toward excellence. Forcht Bank, Edward Jones, and Lexington Habitat for Humanity were a few of many Hamburg Neighbors that were recognized.

Forcht Bank at Best Places to Work in Kentucky Awards. Southern Barker, a dog boutique in the Hamburg area, made their opening official with a ribbon-cutting ceremony on Wednesday, April 18. The boutique, which specializes in pet accessories, luxury dog accessories, dog supplies, and even products for dog owners themselves, is operated by mother-daughter duo Leslie and Sarah Stewart. Southern Barker is located in Hamburg near the intersection of Star Shoot Pkwy and Sir Barton.

Kort Eagle Creek celebrated an Open House and ribbon cutting in April. Fr. Jim Sichko presents a bottle of 23-year-old Pappy Van Winkle bourbon to Pope Francis at The Meeting of the Missionaries of Mercy in Vatican City. According to Buffalo Trace Distillery Each barrel ages for 23 years and is carefully selected from the heart of the warehouse. This whiskey should be enjoyed neat.

Crossroads On May 4 from 9 am to 3:30 pm, Crossroads Andover hosts Leadercast. Leadercast is the largest, one-day leadership event on the planet, with more than 100,000 current visionaries and future world-changers attending each year. GO Local 2018 is an annual community service blitz led by Crossroads. People from the community partner with local non-profit organizations and other churches to serve them through projects such as painting, gardening, landscaping, construction, and more. Pick your project and make plans for your entire family for a fun, high-energy weekend on May 12-13.

In Summer 2017, Sonitrol of Lexington and Bates Security completed one of its most innovative installations. The project at Frederick Douglass High School includes verified audio detection, verified video, and an advanced access control system. Bates Security was awarded the SAMMY Award for Integrated Installation of the Year for its installation at FDHS. The SAMMY program raises the bar for the entire electronic security industry by sharing the best ideas and practices with all.

At 10 am on May 12, head over to the Hamburg Pavilion for the Grand Opening Event at Torrid. From party-ready cocktail dresses and curvy maxi dresses to shirts-and-jeans outfits, Torrid is the best place to find a large selection of all the hottest and on-trend plus size fashion.


HAMBURGJOURNAL.COM

May 2018 | 7

A SAMPLING OF AREA SUMMER CAMPS

professional trained chefs that will teach food and kitchen safety principles, how to operate kitchen equipment, properly prep, store and serve food, as well as food identification. Ages: 4 and up (varies per class) Dates: June 4-8, June 11-15, June 18-22, June 25-29, July 2-6, July 9-13, July 16-20, July 30 August 3, August 6-10 Hours: 9 am - 3

Aviation Camp at The Aviation Museum of Kentucky Learn about the history of aviation, aeronautics, NASA, flight simulation, weather, and aircraft design. Campers will get a behind-the-scenes look at the museum and Blue Grass Airport. With a FAA certified pilot, students will also participate in planning and conducting a flight in the central Kentucky area. Ages: 10 - 16 Dates: June 7-8, June 11-12, June 14-15, June 18-19, June 21-22, June 25-26 (this camp time is for adults who want to attend alongside their child) Hours: 8:30 am - 3:30 pm Awesome Inc. U - Week of Code Summer Camp Instead of your kids spending their free time playing apps, what if they spent it learning to make them? This camp for middle and high-school students prepares your child for the 21st century world by learning the fundamentals of coding. In one week, students will create their own website, mobile app, and video game using HTML, CSS, JavaScript and more. Week of Code boosts creativity, logical thinking skills, and brain power. Ages: 10 - 15 Dates: June 4-7, June 8-21, July 9-12, July 23-26 Hours: 1 pm - 5 pm Explorium of Lexington The Explorium of Lexington creates a fun and dynamic hands-on learning environment that inspires imagination and curiosity. The 2018 summer camp season will include camps for children 3 years of age - 5th grade with a different theme each week. Full-day campers need to bring their own lunches. Morning and afternoon snacks are provided. Campers must be able to use the restroom independently. Type of Camp: Day Ages: 3 years - 5th grade Dates: Weekly from May 22 - August 11 (tentative) Hours: Full-day 8 am - 5:30 pm; Half-day 8 am - 12:30 pm or 1 pm - 5:30 pm (extended hours available for an additional fee)

pm Junior Acheivement BizTown JA BizTown Camp is an indoor, academic camp that combines classroomstyle teaching with hands-on activities. JA BizTown Camp gives kids the opportunity to experience what it’s like to work in a job and help run a business. Kids learn important economic-based concepts such as entrepreneurship, job readiness, business expenses, customer service, team work, and personal banking. Ages: Grades 4th - 6th Dates: June 11-15 and July 9-13 Hours: 9 am - 4 pm Newton’s Attic Newton’s Attic offers 50 different STEM (Science Technology Engineering & Math) camps weekly throughout the summer for ages 6 to 17. All camps are one-week long, Monday through Friday, with half-day and fullday options. Ages: 6 - 17 Dates: See Newton’s Attic Facebook page Hours: Full-day 9 am - 5 pm; Half-day 9 am 12:30 pm or 1:30 pm - 5 pm SeeBlue STEM Camp The SeeBlue STEM Camp’s goal is to expose students to a variety positive learning experiences and career options in the STEM fields. The weeklong day camp is designed to help students explore and integrate the STEM disciplines through authentic hands-on projects and real world applications. Ages: Grades 2nd - 8th (for Fall 2018) Dates: June 4-8 (grades 2nd - 4th) and June 11-15 (grades 5th - 8th) Hours: 9 am - 4 pm Wild Thyme Kids Cooking Camp Weekly themed cooking camps are catered to specific age groups. Young chefs will whip, mix, knead, and learn tried and true recipes and skills to last a lifetime. Camps are taught by

ATHLETIC CAMPS

Kentucky Horse Park Youth Riding Camp Youth riders will spend all day at the Kentucky Horse Park with instructors, learning the basics of stable management, horse care, horseback riding, mounted games, and have a behind the scenes experience of the daily shows and attractions at the Kentucky Horse Park. Ages: 8 - 16 Dates: June 4-8 (beginner level/ages 8-12); June 11-15 (beginner level/ages 13-16); June 18-22 (novice level/ages 8-12); June 25-29 (novice level/ages 13-16) Hours: 9 am - 3:30 pm LEF Rock Climbing Camp Camps include climbing, skill instruction, games and teambuilding. Your child will learn the sport of rock climbing under close supervision of veteran instructors. Ages: 5 - 12 Dates: June 4-8, June 18-22, and July 9-13 (halfday only); June 11-15, June 25-29, July 16-20 (full-day only) Hours: Full-day 9 am - 4 pm; Half-day 9 am - noon or 1 pm - 4 pm Lexington Taekwondo & Jiu Jitsu Camp These camps teach valuable martial arts skills while doing a variety of other off-site activities such as swimming, bowling, gymnastics, and movie days. We also have a weekly on-site “Ninja Challenge” that encourages students to master skills such as strength, coordination, and agility that will definitely bring out the campers’ “inner ninja.” Ages: 4 - 12. Dates: June 4 - August 9 Hours: 7 am - 6 pm Urban Ninja Camp Are your kids functionally fit and capable of handling an emergency like a zombie apocalypse? Urban Ninja Project will teach them how to

while having lots of fun and making new friends. Each Urban Ninja Camp will include a mix of martial arts, parkour, gymnastics, games, Nerf battles, and challenges. Spots are limited to 20 per day, register online. Ages: 5 14 Dates: Every week from June 18 through August 10 Hours: Full-day 9 am - 3 pm; Half-day 9 am - noon or noon to 3 pm (extended hours available for an additional fee)

DAY CAMPS AT THE Y

From traditional summer camps to preschool camps, kids experience a variety of safe activities that build teamwork, teach core values, conflict resolution and leadership skills. Camps include weekly themes, field-trips, swim time, arts & crafts, sports, and more. Preschool camps are only offered at Beaumont and Hamburg YMCA.


8 | May 2018

TEAM MOM

Meet Mrs. Cal, a Renaissance woman (with her own power tools) By Josh Caudill

A

fter the gates open quietly off of a busy section of Richmond Road, the first noise comes from Palmer and McGruff, rushing out of the house to investigate. Duly alerted, waiting at the front door in a gray sweater over black pants and boots, is the First Lady of Kentucky basketball, Ellen Calipari. Unlike her husband, Kentucky head basketball coach John Calipari, Ellen doesn’t operate in the spotlight. She enjoys life behind the scenes as a mother of three and the beloved team mom to the Wildcats basketball roster. Daughter Erin, now an assistant professor of pharmacology at Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, remembers marveling at her mom’s ability to hold down the fort with young children while making sure the bills got paid, that the clothes were clean, the house was functioning, and that everyone was fed. According to Erin, if they were eating, it was thanks to Mom, because their dad only knows how to make French toast, milkshakes, and eggs.

HAMBURGJOURNAL.COM “She looks like this tiny little adorable woman who’s so sweet, but she’s the fiercest, [most] independent, driven woman I’ve ever met in my entire life,” Erin says proudly of her mother. “Normally, people think of the female role model as getting her nails done.

The girls like to tease her about her reputation as the “No” parent. As Erin tells it, if they ever got a “maybe” from their mom, that was an exciting day. Even if they somehow secured an initial ‘Yes’ from their father, it was likely to be vetoed. “For the most part, they probably never asked him and if he would’ve said, ‘yes’ I would have overruled that,” Ellen laughed. “I’m sure it would surprise a lot of people because he’s tough with the players but he’s spineless with our children. I’m the tough person.”

“I No, that’s my dad. My dad would take us to get our nails done. My mom was the one building furniture, teaching us how to use a table saw and a sander, and she’d see something in a magazine and she’d build it.” Mrs. Cal’s handiwork includes a coffee table in the TV room and a console table down in the basement. She’s a renaissance woman with her own power tools. Her husband may be a hall of fame coach, but here, his daughters consider him Mr. Ellen Calipari. Ellen says, “I grew up in a small town in rural Missouri and in a family where we did things that were creative and kind of made our own form of entertainment,” describing how she’d come by her love of learning how things work by watching her own dad work outside. Erin says, “Our upbringing was so funny and reflective of how my sister and I function in society. My mom is very feminine but she’s not your prototypical woman. Anything that went wrong in the house, she could fix it. She was an amazing handyman, and my dad wouldn’t know how to change a lightbulb if he had to.” Ellen says of her early life as a Mom, running Erin to basketball games and Megan to softball, all while Brad was still an infant. “You have the financial stability, so you don’t have to worry about that, but you’re doing everything yourself. In Massachusetts, I stacked the firewood, I mowed the yard, I painted the house, I did the landscaping — and a lot of that is I like to be the hands-on person and if I can do it, I don’t like to ask somebody else to do it for me. That’s just the way I grew up.”

always wanted to be a mother and have always enjoyed being around my kids and being with my kids. They were never embarrassed to have me around when their friends were around which I appreciate,” Ellen says. The peripatetic life of a head coach can be hard enough on grown ups, but being the new kid at school can seem like the end of the world. “That did concern me,” Ellen admits, “because [growing up] I never had to move. Erin was a year and a half the first time we moved. I always looked forward to going back to my parent’s house and we would go a couple of times a year. I think for my kids, it was such a refreshing escape from the life we lived (which was very much under a microscope).” “As they got older, I would ask them, ‘What can I do to make this easier for you?’ because I never had to do it. Do we want to get a list of names from the school and try to call some kids that are going to be in your class? Do you want to go to the school and walk around in it before school starts?’ I just grasped at straws. I think you try to give them a sense of control over the situation that they’re helping make those decisions for themselves.” For Erin, her mother was always the rock during the transitions. When her father took the head coaching job with the New Jersey Nets, Erin remembers being furious about the impending move. In an attempt to console her, she said her father told her if he made her move again, he’d build her a basketball court in the yard. “Of course, two years later, he gets fired by the Nets and we move and I’m furious, ‘You’re making us move again? You’re building that basketball court!’ so they actually did,” Erin laughed. “They did things like that, which is huge and

ridiculous, but they do that to make sure we were okay.” Ellen doesn’t recall all the details as specifically, but she does laugh when she confirms, “We did have a full court basketball court in Memphis and here, we have a half court so I guess that shows you the respect that Brad got.” But the pride the Caliparis take in their children is well reported. Ellen says, “I admire my kids because I don’t know if I could’ve done what they’ve done with the upbringing they’ve had — to be a child of a public figure — but just the fact that the girls are very strong women, making their own way, doing completely different things, just fighting to be the best in their field,” Ellen said. “And for Brad too [who] went away to prep school, which I admired and in a way, it was hard for me but in a way, it wasn’t because it was his choice. [To] make the decision to come here and play for John was not an easy decision. I know he did his homework. I found out from our other players that he called them and asked how hard is it. So, I admire him for being able to make that decision. He didn’t come to Kentucky because it was an easy thing to do, because it was probably the hardest thing to do.”

W

hen the Calipari family moved to Lexington in 2009, Ellen knew absolutely nothing about the area, but it grew on her quickly. She has an appreciation for the horse farms and enjoys a good dinner at Tony’s. She’s been to the Derby, but where she really thrives is the role of team mom. She’s ‘Mrs. Cal’ to her husband’s players, serving as a mother figure and someone to lean on while they’re away from home for the first time in their lives. There’s more caterers involved these days, of course, but early on, she would regularly make team meals for Coach Cal’s players. Those memories are still fresh in Erin’s mind, but what touched her the most was seeing her mom walk players out on Senior Night if their mothers weren’t able to be there. Ellen says, “The first one I remember walking out was John Tate [UMass] and I love being able to do that,” adding, “I just came across some pictures the other day of when Erin was in high school and she had her Senior Night and Brad and I walked her out because John wasn’t there. I’m glad to be able to fill those shoes in a little way.”


HAMBURGJOURNAL.COM

D

erek Willis, who played for the Wildcats from 2013-2017, was especially grateful entering his freshman season. “Right off the bat,” Willis says, “She made me feel welcome because I didn’t know anyone and I was pretty nervous. She’s just a great person to be around and as much credit as Coach Cal gets, she is deserving of every bit or more because she is putting up with his schedule and all of these kids coming in and out — that’s a lot.”

May 2018 | 9 a birthday should be special.” “Especially with a lot of the guys whose families aren’t here, she’s just somebody that they can feel at home with,” Floreal said. “The biggest thing she does for sure, is on the birthdays. If the world forgets, at least you know Mrs. Cal remembers. She’ll bring you a nice plate of brownies to make sure you know somebody has your back.”

introverted, self-conscious person and to do that in Rupp Arena, in front of everybody was a little embarrassing, I guess,” adding “But at the same time, it made my day and it was the first and only time that has ever happened — that I got brownies on my birthday.” Floreal feels close to the family. He befriended Brad through their love for basketball and video games before he

Mrs. Cal has no complaints about empty nest syndrome. Now she has time for Grace and Frankie (she’s the more Netflix savvy of the two), and bringing the dogs to visit Coach at practice. Morning trips for puppuccinos are a regular part of the couple’s routine when he’s not with the team. She has more time for travel now (she still follows him on Twitter to see what recruiting trip he’s on), going to the shooting range, practicing her woodworking and recently, getting to go on her first ride along.

The Caliparis have always been known for their open door policy. Ever since their days at UMass when the house was much smaller (and the kids would attempt to hide their Halloween candy from the players), Erin fondly recalls, “Having 10-12 siblings who would wreak havoc on your life but in a good way.”

B

“People approach me requesting the recipe and then proceed to tell me their recipe thinking I’m going to reciprocate,” she laughs. But, she explains, “it’s not about the brownies. It’s about the recipient. It just started [by] recognizing the fact that these are children and they’re away from home for the first time and they’re having a birthday and

Courtesy UK Athletics

E.J. Floreal, who played for Calipari 2013- 2016, says, “That’s probably hard for a lot of people to open up their house to 15 strangers every year but the fact that she’s willing to do that and that we’re able to sleep there and feel at home or eat there… it’s just a place to be away from everybody. When you’re a Kentucky basketball player, it’s hard to get your alone time.”

eing a Midwest girl, Ellen used to be famous for her brisket, an old recipe she got from her mother. All of the kids loved it until Megan decided to go vegan. Nowadays, it’s all about the brownies.

Erin, who likes to refer to herself as being the first Italian son for 10 years until Brad was born, says her mother was “pumped” that her son is so close to home where she can keep an eye on him and make sure he’s okay and yes, still comes over to do laundry. “My mom is in heaven. She gets to see her husband coach and watch her son play. It’s a family thing now,” Erin said. “It’s been really good to watch them and it’s nice to hear everybody cheer him on when he gets in the game,” Ellen says. “I’ve learned from Brad too that it’s hard to sit on the bench for two hours and go in cold and make a shot.”

Willis saw Mrs. Cal’s selflessness on display when she caught up Bam Adebayo’s laundry after he got behind and was in desperate need of clean clothes. Karl Towns, who still texts Ellen, was also the occasional beneficiary of her laundry skills.

Everyone from Big Blue Nation understands the reputation of Mrs. Cal’s fabled brownies that she gives to each player on his birthday. It’s probably one of her husband’s best pitches on the recruiting trail. (If it isn’t, it should be.)

seen at every game usually wearing Brad’s jersey and cheering on the team.

Each birthday batch is about three stacks high and they’re hoarded like gold. As Floreal tells it, “if you leave your brownies in your locker all day, odds are you’re going to be missing five or six when you come back...They will ask you for the brownies before they even tell you Happy Birthday,” Floreal said. In the 2015-2016 season, the players got together and returned the gesture by making brownies for Ellen’s birthday and delivering them to her before a game against Illinois State. One by one, they each came by to hug her. “The brownies were very good,” she admits, “but I’m more of a shy,

even came to Kentucky and joined the team. But what truly stood out to Floreal was how Mrs. Cal treated him when he left the basketball team to pursue track and field. “For me, the biggest thing by far is when I switched sports,” Floreal said. “Instead of casting me away...every time I see her, she hugs me, I hug her, she asks how I’m doing, how’s track and how she can’t wait to see it work out. She showed me support even with the stretch. That’s real.” Before Brad joined the Wildcats two years ago, Ellen stayed under the radar, but has now outed herself. She can be

UK’s basketball program owes much of its success to Mrs. Cal’s role as First Lady and team mom. Floreal speaks for BBN when he says, “this program would not be the same without her and Coach Cal wouldn’t be the same without her either. She plays as big of a role. She’s an integral part of what happens here. She deserves a big ‘thank you’ for all of the stuff she does.” As she welcomes new kids into the Calipari family every season, showing them the love, the support (and yes, the brownies), she’s still just Mom to Erin, Megan and Brad, a role that she cherishes most. “Spend time with your kids,” she says. “Do kid things with your kids. I always got out and played. Nothing was beneath me. Just enjoy it. It goes so fast and it should be so fun.”


10 | May 2018

FOOD

FAMILY TRADITION Meet Joyce Spalding Spalding’s Bakery By Josh Caudill

HAMBURGJOURNAL.COM

Leverett

of

W

hen the bakery was downtown, Leverett recalls a time when they all lived over the shop — and daughter

J

“Miss Joyce” as many customers and former students know her, smiles as she proudly leafs through all the 90th birthday cards made by the second graders at Christ the King School. “Time passes too quickly,” Leverett says. Spalding’s Bakery, on Winchester Road, is a living scrapbook —from the photo of Leverett’s grandfather with his bakery delivery wagon in the early 1900s, all the way to her daughters and relatives who still work alongside her today.

any decades later, Leverett still recalls the early days of the family business. “This was during the Great Depression but I didn’t know that. It was hard times because everybody worked and everybody that I knew had plenty to eat. We were open 24 hours a day, seven days a week,” Leverett said.

oyce Spalding Leverett celebrates her 90th birthday by putting on a clean apron and working behind the counter of the bakery that her father Bowman J. Spalding and her mother Zelma started out of their home in Lexington back in 1929. Daughter Catherine Leverett Barton began the day on facebook, “If you are one of her former students or a loyal bakery customer, remember my sweet mother on her 90th birthday. She will be at work as usual at Spalding’s Bakery. Stop in to wish her Happy Birthday. She taught 37 years before retiring, Bryan Station Junior High, Tates Creek Senior High...Truly a remarkable lady with a strong work ethic and a determined constitution!”

M

“Little Pies were a specialty item then. I learned how to write by writing the words ‘Apple,’ ‘Peach,’ ‘Pineapple’ and ‘Cherry’ in these little glassine bags that we put the pies in. I think they sold for a nickel,” Leverett said. “We sold doughnuts in this store, three for a nickel but those nickels were hard to get because grown men were working for $1 a day.”

Martha would sneak downstairs to the bakery where her grandfather fed her glazed doughnuts early in the morning before her mother would wake up... and then wonder why Martha wasn’t hungry. “When we moved, I suddenly began to eat breakfast again,” Edwards laughs. Both of Leverett’s daughters, Martha Edwards and Catherine Barton, as well as her grandchildren, learned how to count money and how to make change and count the money back while at the bakery.

A

fter Leverett graduated from Transylvania University, she would go on to teach for 37 years, while also working the bakery with her brother and her father. Spalding’s is such an iconic landmark that every day is filled with customers from multiple generations who are well known to the bakers by their families, backgrounds, how many kids they have, and when their birthdays are. Three generations of Spalding women have been known to laugh and cry along with customers, sharing moments of both joy and sorrow. “We had a customer who was buried with a

When Leverett was a child, Spalding’s made bread, buns, pies, wedding cakes in addition to doughnuts, but there were very few supermarkets. There was only one large commercial baking place in town. They serviced all of the restaurants downtown in Lexington in those days with all types of breads that required the 24-hour opening. She tucks the cards behind the cash register the bakery has had since 1935, the one she and her father got from a grocery store that went bankrupt, replacing the cigar box where they previously had kept the money. On Mother’s Day, you’ll find her behind the counter as usual. “We always work on Mother’s Day,” she says. “We’re feeding other mothers. We’re pretty busy, but we’re together.”

been on a ventilator for four days, still unresponsive. His doctor informed the family that it was time to call in the minister and close family members to say their goodbyes. They all delivered their heartfelt farewells… but still no response. “His son said, ‘Pop, if you’d like a Spalding’s doughnut, wiggle your big toe.’ He flexed his entire foot,” Leverett laughed. “He called in the nurse and his son repeated it and he flexed his whole foot. I guess it was time for him to wake up and he wanted to hear something good.” “I thanked her for calling and thought, ‘That’s a good story. I wonder if it’s really true?’ About three months later, this big, healthy looking man walks in and said, ‘My wife called you at home and told you I’m the one who wiggled my foot.’ So that kind of touches you.”

L

exington dentist Dr. Billy A. Forbess met Leverett over 20 years ago and will tell you firmly that Spalding’s has the best dessert in Lexington. But he’s impressed by more than just the confections. “It tells you something when there’s a line out the door from the time they open to the time they close. Where else do you see people wait 30 minutes in line to get a doughnut? It’s a real family business.” He adds, “There’s so many churches they serve and have doughnuts for every Sunday morning. If you went in there Sunday morning and saw how many people came by there and have preorders all boxed up, tied up and ready to go — I bet they’re feeding half the churches in Lexington! I don’t know if you could have church without Spalding’s.” With a reputation like that, the Spalding family has heard many stories of how meaningful their donuts are.

Edwards recalls, “I remember being taught how to write my name, standing behind the counter. My grandmother would show me how to write my name.” “Then she went up into the living room with some sharp object and wrote her name in front of a cherry desk,” Leverett interrupts. “And you’ll never let me forget that,” Edwards laughs.

doughnut in his pocket,” Leverett says. “Recently, at his celebration of life, one of our former customers had his three favorite foods served—hot dogs, Coors Light, and Spalding’s doughnuts… it was listed in the obituary.” One of the most memorable stories was the phone call Leverett received at home several years ago. A woman said her husband had a heart attack, had developed pneumonia, and had

In addition to the community impact, Leverett’s most cherished experiences are spending her days with her daughters and grandchildren and enjoying the life and business their family has built. Leverett puts it simply, “My parents would be proud.”


HAMBURGJOURNAL.COM

FOOD

May 2018 | 11

MOTHER’S DAY PROGRAMMING THURSDAY MAY 10

Join the Chrysalis House for their 7th annual Mother’s Day luncheon, starting at 11:30 am. Celebrate mothers in recovery and all mothers in our community who work every day to make healthy choices for their families. The Mother’s Day Luncheon will be catered by the Apiary Fine Catering.

On May 12 at 3 pm, boys and girls ages 6 to 12 are invited to The Kitchen at A.S. Eats to prepare and serve tea for their mom. During this cooking class, kids will spend the first 90 minutes preparing for the tea and the last 30 minutes serving. All proceeds go to Girls on the Run of Central Kentucky.

SUNDAY MAY 13

Pivot Brewing is offering Cider Mimosas and Michelada’s, along with Mother’s Day brunch by Babz Bistro. They also are offering a Flights and Flowers special from 10 am to 3 pm where flights will come with mini-bouquets. Hopcat is honoring all moms this Mother’s Day by offering a special on Crack Fries. The Club at UK’s Spindletop Hall hosts a Mother’s Day Brunch on May 13 from 11 am to 2 pm.

Come enjoy a Mother/Daughter Tea in the Cottage at Ashland at 4 pm. Tea, cookies, sandwiches, scones and jam provided by The Ginkgo Tree Cafe.

SATURDAY MAY 12

Join Meg C Jewelry for a Mother’s Day Tea Party. The tea parties will be on Saturday, May 12 at 10 am and Sunday, May 13 at noon. Man O’ War Church hosts a catered Mother’s Day Luncheon at 11 am on May 12. Bring your mother, daughter, sister, neighbor, or friend and celebrate the day together.

Celebrate Mother’s Day with the whole family and your friends by taking a brunch or dinner cruise on the historic steamboat Belle of Louisville. Each cruise offers a catered buffet, music, and activities for kids. The brunch cruise sets sail at noon and dinner at 5:30 pm. Take your mom to brunch at J. Render’s Southern Table. You can enjoy bloody mary’s, mimosas, southern biscuits, cinnamon rolls, and much more starting at 11 am. Visit hamburgjournal.com for a complete list of Mother’s Day programming.


12 | May 2018

HAMBURGJOURNAL.COM

NEWS FOR PARENTS

TUESDAY MAY 1

Scholastic Book Fairs big warehouse sale is at the Lexington Convention Center May 1 through May 3. Buy one, get one on thousands of books to refresh your school, home, or classroom libraries.

WEDNESDAY MAY 2

On The Move Art Studio hosts a kids canvas painting class at 6:30 pm at Crank & Boom in the distillery district. Kids will be guided in a step-by-step painting lesson to complete a fun painting on a stretched canvas board to take home to cherish forever. The Weekday Storytime at the Hamburg Barnes and Noble is now on Wednesday mornings at 10am. Join Hamburg Barnes and Noble in the Children’s section at the back of the store for a fun-filled Storytime with a craft/activity to follow.

THURSDAY MAY 3

Kentucky Children’s Garden at the Arboretum hosts a Frog Noise Maker workshop at 10:30 am, 1 pm, and 3 pm. Learn about the frog life cycle and why

frogs croak while making a fun noise maker craft. On May 3, The Living Arts & Science Center hosts “Discovery Night: The Art of Flight.” Enjoy a live bird show and meet special guests like a red tailed hawk, turkey vulture, great horned owl, and a peregrine falcon.

SATURDAY MAY 5

Llama Llama is becoming a reader and can’t wait to show his mother everything he’s learned. Join Hamburg Barnes and Noble on Saturday May 05 at 11:00 am for Storytime and activities featuring this beloved character.

SUNDAY MAY 6

Waveland State Historical Site is the home field to the only Kentucky Vintage Baseball team, The Bluegrass Barons. On May 6, at 1 pm, come enjoy a wonderful day of history, food, and baseball as it was in the 1860’s. Brush off old cleats or come get your new ones dirty at the Football Combine in Shillito Park. From 2 - 4 pm boys and girls, ages 5 - 12, are invited to learn football skills and drills.

WEDNESDAY MAY 9

Lexington Public Library, Eastside Branch, hosts Book Buzz on May 9 at 6:30 pm. Learn about the summer’s hottest reads and take home some advance copies to jump start your summer reading.

THURSDAY MAY 10

Kentucky Children’s Garden at the Arboretum hosts “Animal Track Stamp Art” workshop. Animals are all around us, but we don’t see them. How can we tell they are there? Create animal path artwork to take home.

FRIDAY MAY 11

Girl Scouts of Kentucky’s Wilderness invites you to join them on May 11 for an “Under the Sea” themed Lexington Legends Lock-in. Cheer on the Legends as they face the Delmarva Shorebirds and afterwards, pitch a tent and spend the night on the Legends field.

Honey Hill Farms petting zoo, tie dye t-shirt stands, and more activities. Kentucky Children’s Garden at the Arboretum hosts “Beginning to Garden” on May 12. Go on a short tour of the Home Demonstration Garden, create a fairy garden, then plant seeds to grow. An event for the Lexington Family Nature Club.

SATURDAY MAY 19

Join Hamburg Barnes and Noble on May 12 at 11 am for a special Mother’s Day Storytime featuring books by bestselling authors Hoda Kotb and Jimmy Fallon with activities to follow.

Celebrate Lexington’s Frontier Founding from 10 am to 4 pm on May 19 at McConnell Springs Park. Enjoy live music, food, wildlife programs, guided tours of the park, colonial crafts and tools, flintlock longrifles, Indian artifacts and children’s activities. Be part of the hands-on demonstrations around the 1776 log cabin as the frontier pioneer & native reenactors bring history to life.

Head to Most Valuable Pets from 11 am to 4 pm for the 17th Annual Hamster Derby. Come enjoy beach volleyball,

The Kentucky Ballet presents “The Little Mermaid” May 19-20 at the Lexington Opera House.

SATURDAY MAY 12


HAMBURGJOURNAL.COM

May 2018 | 13

Join Hamburg Barnes and Noble on May 19 at 11 am for Storytime and activities in celebration of the Royal Wedding.

embark on a cultural tour of several different countries by exploring games, foods, and worldly locations. Campers develop a sense of achievement and belonging, all while learning about how different people live throughout the world.

THURSDAY MAY 24

Big Brothers Big Sisters of the Bluegrass hosts a night out with the Lexington Legends. Head to the ballpark for a fun night of baseball and a 90s throwback theme night.

SATURDAY MAY 26

Poolapalooza at Southland Aquatic Center is on May 26 from noon to 4 pm to kick off the pool season. The City’s other aquatic centers open for the season as well, including Castlewood, Tates Creek and Woodland.

WEDNESDAY MAY 30

Kentucky Children’s Garden at the Arboretum hosts “Digging for Decomposers Science Experiment.” Take part in a science experiment to investigate different types of soil and the creatures that call them home.

DAY CAMPS AT THE Y

From traditional summer camps to preschool camps, kids experience a variety of safe activities that build teamwork, teach core values, conflict resolution and leadership skills. Camps include weekly themes, field-trips, swim time, arts & crafts, sports, and more. Preschool camps are only offered at Beaumont and Hamburg YMCA. Ages: 3 - 5 (preschool camps) and 5 - 12 (day camps) Hours: 7 am - 6 pm Week 1: June 4 - 8 Walk of Fame - Spend time practicing your talents to be showcased at the end of the week when campers will walk the red carpet and have their moment in the limelight. Week 2: June 11 - 15 Amazing

Race

-

Campers

will

Week 3: June 18 - 22 Week of Champions - Campers will get in the game, celebrate their favorite athlete, participate in multiple sports games and discover an inner champion. Week 4: June 25 - 29 Supersonic - Did you ever wonder how we hear music or how gravity works? Experiment with gravity, sound, light and motion as we put science into action. Week 5: July 2 - 6 Hoppin’ Holidays - What’s your favorite holiday? Each day will focus on a different holiday celebrated somewhere in the world. Week 6: July 9 - 13 Animal Planet - Lions and tigers and giraffes, oh my! Campers will explore the jungle, forest, sea, and desert in a week of animals, dress up, and other

COMING SOON to the Whitaker Family YMCA

adventures. Week 7: July 16 - 20 Unsolved Mysteries - Campers will act as forensic scientists while collecting and examining evidence from unsolved mysteries. Earn your very own mystery solver badge! Week 8: July 23 - 27 Brave New World - Learn how to create a story, design costumes and create a world from your imagination. Tell your own story, write narratives with friends, and act them out. Week 9: July 30 - August 3 Everyday Heroes - When you help someone, or help solve a problem, you become a hero. Campers will learn about protecting the environment, serve on a camp patrol and learn lifesaving first aid and CPR skills. Week 10: August 6 - 10 Board Games Galore - Campers will help reinvent board games, create their own, play classic games and even play in a life-size format. Bring your game face!

A NEW OUTDOOR PAVILION The 4,000-square-foot Pavilion will incorporate bathrooms, multiple external water fountains, external hand washing stations, picnic tables, backpack storage off the ground, and much needed shade. The Pavilion will fit into the style and aesthetics of the Whitaker Family YMCA and the surrounding neighborhood and will create a great experience for kids in the YMCA summer day camps.

SUMMER DAY CAMPS Day camp is all about discovery. Kids are given the opportunity to explore nature, find new talents, try new activities, gain independence and make lasting memories - all through a variety of activities! And, of course, it’s fun too! Activities may include theme-based weeks, arts & crafts, STEM, sports, outdoor play, music and dance, swimming, field trips and more. Learn more at ymcacky.org/camp.

Camp weeks are filling up fast, register today!


14 | May 2018

HAMBURGJOURNAL.COM

HEALTH

NEWS

Baseball in tobacco-free

Lexington

is

now

Mayor Jim Gray, Legends CEO Andy Shea, and Foundation for a Healthy Kentucky CEO Ben Chandler announced new movements of tobaccofree policies in Whitaker Bank Ballpark, and all city-owned ballparks. These policies are in part of a nationwide campaign to break the connection among baseball and smokeless tobacco. Bike Month May is Bike Month in Lexington. Every mile that you bike instead of drive saves a pound of pollution from going into the air. For local events and rides, visit the bike community and bike shop pages in Lexington. UK

HealthCare

Opens

New

Kentucky Children’s Hospital Lobby and NICU in Chandler Hospital After years of careful planning, Kentucky Children’s Hospital (KCH) unveiled the new Makenna Foundation Welcome Center and Betti Ruth Robinson Taylor Neonatal Intensive Care Unit in the University of Kentucky Albert B. Chandler Hospital. Designated in 1988, KCH lacked a central lobby and registration space, and was only accessible via a single visitor elevator. This spacious center includes patient and visitor registration, a gift shop, a digital interactive wall, and a large-scale art installation called “Exuberance,” which is comprised of marble-filled kites suspended from the ceiling. The welcome center includes the Simpson Family Theater which will

host events and programs coordinated by KCH’s Child Life Department, and a gift shop stocked with child and family focused items.

natural light cycles, benefiting babies in their development, weight gain, and growth while reducing crying and fussiness

The Pediatric Health Education Center, located in the welcome center, is a resource for both parents and children that offers child-centric health information education. It will also serve as a business center for parents and families.

Infant Nutrition Room with inventory software for the storage and tracking of milk and formula

Beyond the welcome center is the new Betti Ruth Robinson Taylor Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU). This 36,000 square foot facility replaces the current NICU on the KCH’s fourth floor. The new facility will allow the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU) to expand into the newly vacated space. “This new facility is a dream come true for our team,” said Dr. Scottie B.

Day, physician-in-chief of Kentucky Children’s Hospital. “We partnered with doctors, nurses and staff, as well as our patient-parent advisory group to create a space where we can deliver advanced care to our most vulnerable patients.” The new NICU has 68 patient rooms, including two twin rooms, for a total of 70 beds. Each room has a daybed so parents can stay with their babies as much as possible. Other amenities include: Nature-themed corridors, called neighborhoods, that feature colorful mosaics inspired by Kentucky wildlife that assist in wayfinding and establishing a sense of community A kangaroo chair, breast pump, and Penguin milk cooler in each room Circadian rhythm lighting that mimics

Homelike amenities including a lounge, kitchen, laundry, and shower facilities for parents of long-term patients Two care-by-parent rooms to help parents transition into caring for their child on their own before discharge Staff spaces that include a workroom, lounge area, quiet room and terrace, allowing staff to work and rest while staying close to patients. “This NICU is the result of the careful collaboration for which UK HealthCare

is known,” said Gwen Moreland, assistant chief nurse executive of Kentucky Children’s Hospital. “Invaluable input from our staff, patients and families, support from our donors and boards, and the creativity of our designers and engineers culminated with this space, an integral piece of supporting UK’s mission to provide advanced patient care.” The new NICU is a far cry from UK’s first premature nursery, established in 1972. Dr. Nirmala Desai recalls a unit with no specialized equipment for premature babies, outfitted only with the leftovers from other units in the hospital. “I fought hard to get the bare minimum, from baby-sized bag valve masks to a radiant warmer,” Desai said. “We didn’t have enough beds for the babies; they were put two to a bed.”

Dr. Douglas Cunningham recalls his first day on the job in 1974, when newborn transport consisted of a doctor running up the stairs with twins tucked under each arm “like footballs.” Neither Desai nor Cunningham could have ever envisioned a new space like the one unveiled today. “The state-of-the-art NICU is simply spectacular,” Desai said. “Witnessing this transition for UK neonatal care, from an improvised preemie nursery to this modern facility today makes me proud and incredibly happy.” As neonatology emerged as a field in the late 1970s with established standards of care and with the support of hospital administration and government agencies, the preemie nursery expanded into a proper 2,000 square foot NICU with 17 beds in 1974, and again to a 10,000 square foot, 50-bed facility in 1981. The next expansion to the current space occurred in the mid-nineties, taking the NICU from 50 beds to 66. The changing landscape of public health, including the opioid crisis, necessitates advanced facilities to manage complex care. About 40 percent of birthing mothers at UK HealthCare are considered high risk; 20 percent of their infants are low birth weight and are admitted to the NICU. About 50 percent of the NICU admissions come from UK’s delivery service. The remainder of the infants are transported by the nurse clinician on the neonatal transport team. “At-risk newborns, and babies born early require specialized treatment,” Day said. “There is not a one-size-fitsall approach to intensive care. As central and eastern Kentucky’s only Level IV NICU, we have an obligation to treat not only our patients, but their families with the utmost care during a stressful and trying time.”


HAMBURGJOURNAL.COM

HEALTH

May 2018 | 15

WEDNESDAY MAY 2

On May 2 at 6 pm, Good Foods Co-op host a class to discuss dietary changes that will help to improve overall metabolism and normalizing blood sugar levels. Goals include inspiring people to make positive and healthy lifestyle choices regarding nutrition and eating habits and helping participants understand how they can help prevent Type II Diabetes without the use of medication.

Run over to the Kentucky Horse Park on May 12 to honor and commemorate John Sensenig’s 40 years of service to the local running community. John has been a fixture in the local running and walking community since opening his first local running shop in 1977. Year-in and year-out, John and his Run/Walk Shop has been at the forefront of creating a lively and local running/walking family.

Brews, Boots, & Beats event at the Bluegrass Airport to raise funds for KVC Behavioral HealthCare. This event features a concert performance by Walker Montgomery, hors d’oeuvres, drinks, dancing and more. KVC Kentucky has provided an array of in-home behavioral healthcare and substance abuse treatment, family preservation and reunification, and foster care services.

THURSDAY MAY 3

Libelle Aesthetics and Weight Loss Center hosts their Spring Open House on May 3 at 5 pm. Attendees may enjoy hor d’oeuvres, refreshments, free gifts from sponsors, and chances to win products/services.

TUESDAY MAY 8

Visually Impaired Preschool Services hosts its 15th Annual Golf Outing, a fundraising event that helps hundreds of children, birth through age 5, who are blind or visually impaired in Central and Eastern Kentucky. The event is May 8 at Keene Trace Golf Club.

FRIDAY MAY 11

Help Kentucky Extension Homemakers (KEHA) raise awareness and funds for Ovarian Cancer Research. On May 11 from 11 am to 1 pm, attend a Tea and Fashion Show Benefit at the Fayette Co. Extension Office. Embry’s of Lexington will be providing the fashion show, and there will be a silent auction with many gifts and items perfect for Mother’s Day, summer birthdays and much more.

SATURDAY MAY 12

The Central Kentucky Heart Walk is the American Heart Association’s premier event for raising funds to save lives from this country’s No. 1 and No. 5 killers - heart disease and stroke. Create a team with your friends, co workers and family to help fight these diseases. 8 am at Keeneland.

Cystic Fibrosis Foundation of Kentucky/West Virginia asks you to join them at their Great Strides event on May 19 at Whitaker Bank Ballpark. Tens of thousands of co-workers, friends, and families come together each year as one community for one cause – to find a cure for cystic fibrosis. Enjoy an hour long, all-levels yoga class outdoors at Eckert’s-Boyd Orchard in Versailles, KY on May 19 at 10 am. After class, head out to the strawberry fields to enjoy a complimentary quart of Pick-Your-Own Strawberries.

SUNDAY MAY 6

The Great Cake Race 5K/1M is at Keeneland on May 6 from 4 pm to 6 pm. It’s a family friendly event featuring bands, activities for children, cupcakes for participants, awards, and much more.

Beast Pacing hosts the 3rd annual Horse Capital Half Marathon at FasigTipton on Newtown Pike on May 19 at 7 am. A portion of the proceeds benefit Bluegrass Farms Charities.

THURSDAY MAY 24 Good Food Co-op is screening “Heal” as part of their 2018 Film Series. Director Kelly Noonan Gores’ documentary takes us on a scientific and spiritual journey where we discover that our thoughts, beliefs, and emotions have a huge impact on our health and ability to heal. The screening is at 7 pm and stick around afterward for a discussion with Karen DiGirolamo, a Jin Shin Jyutsu Practitioner and the Mind Body Movement Coordinator for UK HealthCare Integrative Medicine and Health.

MONDAY MAY 14

Learn more about biking for transportation at the Life is a Cycle group bike ride presented by Bike Lexington on May 14 at 6 pm.

FRIDAY MAY 18

The American Cancer Society’s Purses, Pouts & Pearls is a one-ofa-kind evening featuring food, silent auction, survivor honoree speaker, and purse bingo. The event is at 6 pm on May 18 in the Woodford Reserve Room of Kroger Field. On Friday, May 18, KVC Kentucky and NexGen Aviation hosts the first

SATURDAY MAY 19

Tour de Cure is the American Diabetes Association’s signature fundraising event. On May 19 at Keeneland, you can ride, run or walk to raise funds for research, advocacy, programs and education to support those living with diabetes.

Dr Christine Courtois, the author of “It’s Not You: It’s What Happened to you: Complex Trauma and Treatment,” will discuss practical ways to help resolve complex trauma. She will draw on her extensive research to give insight into why clients stay “stuck” in their trauma, and how you can help them. 9 am - noon at DoubleTree Suites on Richmond Rd.

FRIDAY MAY 25

The Glo Run Night Race 5K & 10K is at the Kentucky Horse Park on May 25 at 9:20 pm.


16 | May 2018

HAMBURGJOURNAL.COM

SENIOR EVENTS AND NEWS

I KNOW EXPO 2018

I Know Expo in April was filled with empowering information about the services, resources and support available to make the rest of life the best of life. Scores of experts who know about aging well and coping with disabilities were on hand to share what they know by chatting one-on-one or through informative presentations on everything from housing, healthcare and insurance, to legal

NEWS

and financial planning, to living well and staying active and learn what is available and accessible to you here in the community we live in. The “i know expo” can help folks young and old plan for the future with more confidence. Exhibitors included: Edward Jones, Kentucky Health Solutions, LexTran, Senior Services Commission, Social Security Administration, The Willows, and many more.

The AARP Community Challenge “quick-action” grant program is now accepting applications for 2018. The Community Challenge is giving grants to fund “quick action” projects in areas such as housing, transportation, and public space aimed at sparking change and improving the quality of life for people of all ages in communities across our nation. In 2017, Lexington-Fayette Urban County Government placed ADA-accessible benches along a city trial and were positioned in a U-shaped style to foster greater social interaction. Applications for grants are due on May 16 by 5 pm.

EVENTS WEDNESDAY MAY 2

speaker shares helpful tips about when it’s time for your loved one to transition to a memory care community.

WEDNESDAY MAY 9

On May 9 at 10:30 the Lexington Senior Center is helping improve your brain power and teaching tips and tricks to keep your brain healthy. Learn how to be a safer driver with “AARP Driver Safety with Red Grange” 11:30 am, May, 9. You must reserve your space. No lunch break taken so bring a sandwich to enjoy during video portions of the class.

Elder Law Lexington is hosting an elder care planning seminar on May 2 and May 10 at 11 am and 6 pm. Come hear the truth about Medicaid Eligibility and start planning for the future.

THURSDAY MAY 3

On May 3 The Lexington Senior Center is hosting “Finger Snapping, Foot Tapping Barbershop Revue” at 2 pm. Join the Overtones for an exciting afternoon of barbershop music.

MONDAY MAY 7

Please join Sanders-Brown Center on Aging for their 10th Annual Mind Matters Health Fair on May 7 at 10 am. Learn about aging and your immune system, how good it is for you to laugh, and how you can help yourself today to live well tomorrow. On May 7 at noon, join Morning Pointe of Lexington as an expert

TUESDAY MAY 22

Aging With Grace hosts a meeting on May 22 at 6:30 pm where Steve Hammond will present time tested financial principles that apply especially to women of all ages and couples to improve financial health as we age.


HAMBURGJOURNAL.COM

May 2018 | 17

SENIOR EVENTS AND NEWS

WEDNESDAY MAY 30

YMCA Senior Health and Fitness Day is Wednesday, May 30 at 9 am. Celebrate all you can do at the Y to increase your health and fitness. 9-9:30 am will be a Coffee Social. At 9:45 am SilverSneaker Classic Class designed to increase muscle strength, range of movement and activities for daily living. Hand-held weights, elastic tubing with handles and a ball are offered for resistance. At 11 am KentuckyOne Health will present information on a Six-Step Balance System program beginning in June to prevent falls. Additional activities include chair volleyball, pickleball, bocce ball, giant board games, water fitness and a healthy snack provided by the Willows.

CAROLYN’S CORNER BOOK CLUB

The book club meets on the first and third Thursday of each month at 10 a.m. and is open to all. The May reading will be Circling the Sun by Paula McLain, discussed on May 3 and 17.

Call to advertise in our special

SENIORS SECTION Introduce your business to the Sandwich Generation — our readers who are raising their kids and caring for aging parents simultaneously. They are seeking information, programs, and resources. Your ad plan delivers.

859-268-0945

ads@hamburgjournal.com designed especially for decision makers considering options in senior housing, healthcare, and financial sectors

Hamburg Senior/Kid flyer postcards.indd

1

4/30/15

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18 | May 2018

HAMBURGJOURNAL.COM

CALENDAR OF EVENTS

TUESDAY MAY 1

The Foo Fighters are coming to Rupp Arena on Tuesday, May 1 at 7:30 pm. This date is for the rescheduled event, so those who purchased tickets earlier will still be honored.

The Legacy Ball is May 4 at 8 pm at the Woodford Reserve Club in Kroger Field.

SATURDAY MAY 5

The 144th Kentucky Derby is May 5 at Churchill Downs in Louisville.

The Great Cake Race 5K/1M is at Keeneland on May 6 from 4 pm to 6 pm. It’s a family friendly event featuring bands, activities for children, cupcakes for participants, awards, and much more.

WEDNESDAY MAY 2

33rd Annual National Conference on Equine Law is on May 2 and 3 at Keeneland.

THURSDAY MAY 3

Blue Grass Tours is having a “Best of Bourbon Tour” that includes Heaven Hill Bourbon Heritage Center, Jim Beam American Stillhouse and Maker’s Mark Distillery.

FRIDAY MAY 4

Dwight Yoakam will be at the Iroquois Amphitheater in Louisville on May 4 at 8 pm. Watch and bet on the Oaks at Keeneland May 4, gates open at 9 am. UK’s May Commencement takes place on over two days. The first day of graduation is on Friday May 4 at 10 am and 2 pm at Rupp Arena.

Waveland State Historical Site is the home field to the only Kentucky Vintage Baseball team, The Bluegrass Barons. On May 6, at 1 pm, come enjoy a wonderful day of history, food, and baseball as it was in the 1860s.

TUESDAY MAY 8 Don’t miss the world’s biggest Derby Party. With over 1,000 televisions, easy access to wagering, great food, activities for the kids and more, Derby Day at Keeneland is the perfect place to view the Run for the Roses.

SUNDAY MAY 6

UK’s May Commencement is on Sunday May 6 at 10 am and 2 pm at Rupp Arena

Five Finger Death Punch and Shinedown are playing at Rupp Arena on May 8 at 6 pm.

THURSDAY MAY 10

Join the celebration of Kentucky Vineyards and Winemaking. The Kentucky Wine & Vine Fest is held in Nicholasville, KY May 10 through May 12. Enjoy Kentucky wineries, Kentucky Proud food, arts & crafts, and live music.

SATURDAY MAY 12

On May 12, Monster Jam is at Rupp Arena. Monster Jam is adrenalinecharged family entertainment providing jaw-dropping displays and gravity-defy-

WEDNESDAY MAY 9

The Festival of Praise Tour stops in Lexington at Rupp Arena on May 9. The Gospel eccentric tour features Grammy, Stellar and Dove Awardwinning great Fred Hammond, along with Donnie Mcclurkin, Take 6, James Fortune, and Charles Jenkins. ing feats. World-class drivers push perfectly engineered trucks to their limits in Freestyle, “2-Wheel Skills” and Racing competitions that will put families on the edge of their seats. The Central Kentucky Heart Walk is on May 12 at 8 am at Keeneland. The Heart Walk is the American Heart Association’s premier event for raising funds to save lives from this country’s No. 1 and No. 5 killers - heart disease and stroke.


HAMBURGJOURNAL.COM

May 2018 | 19

CALENDAR OF EVENTS

The 28th annual Sayre Horse Show is on May 12 at Masterson Station park at 8 am. Enjoy family-friendly activities, local food and retail vendors, biking demonstrations, and live music, all taking place at the Southland Drive Street Fair, May 12 at 3 pm.

Friday, May 18, Taste of the Bluegrass is at Keeneland’s Keene Barn & Entertainment Center. Taste of the Bluegrass is a celebration of food and beverages, with live music and a silent auction. Taste some of the best appetizers, drinks, entrees, and desserts from more than sixty local restaurants, breweries, wineries, and distilleries.

Girls Night Out

SUNDAY MAY 13 Mothers Day

Check out Hamburgjournal.com to find out what’s happening on Mother’s Day

WEDNESDAY MAY 16

The Bluegrass Classic Stockdog Trial will be held at Masterson Station Park on May 16-20. Families and spectators are invited to bring their own dogs. The event runs continuously from dawn until dusk and there are spectator raffles, lunchtime concessions, numerous vendors and cold drinks available.

Bring in this ad for a

FREE CLASS

($25 Value) Must register in advance

Ladies Only - Intro to Handguns

THURSDAY MAY 17

Lunafest Lexington is May 17 at 7 pm at the Kentucky Theatre. Lunafest Lexington is an inspirational evening of short films by, for, and about women.

FRIDAY MAY 18

The American Cancer Society’s Purses, Pouts & Pearls is a one-ofa-kind evening featuring food, silent auction, survivor honoree speaker, and purse bingo. The event is at 6 pm on May 18 in the Woodford Reserve Room of Kroger Field. On Friday, May 18, KVC Kentucky and NexGen Aviation hosts the first Brews, Boots, & Beats event at the Bluegrass Airport to raise funds for KVC Behavioral HealthCare. This event features a concert performance by Walker Montgomery, hors d’oeuvres, drinks, dancing and more. KVC Kentucky has provided an array of in-home behavioral healthcare and substance abuse treatment, family preservation and reunification, and foster care services.

A Fun & Exciting Evening:

SATURDAY MAY 19

Francisco’s Farm Arts Festival is held in Midway, KY on May 19-20 starting at 10 am. The festival includes fine art, food, live music, public art projects, artist demonstrations, and other special exhibits. Celebrate Lexington’s Frontier Founding from 10 am to 4 pm on May 19 at McConnell Springs Park. Enjoy live music, food, wildlife programs, guided tours of the park, colonial crafts and tools, flintlock longrifles, Indian artifacts and children’s activities. Be part of the hands-on demonstrations around the 1776 log cabin as the frontier pioneer & native reenactors bring history to life. The Alltech Craft Brews and Food Fest is on May 19 at the Lexington Convention Center. With over 60 breweries and 200 beers, the festival will showcase the finest the craft beer

• Basic Firearm Safety • Gripping, Stance and Trigger Press • Shooting at our Indoor Range

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FREE 1/2 Hour of Range Time & Gun Rental ($22.50 Value)

Ammunition is not included and must be purchased at time of redemption. For more information please call (859) 368-0419 Ext 7207 or visit www.budsgunshopky.com. Valid the month of May 2018 only.

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20 | May 2018

HAMBURGJOURNAL.COM

CALENDAR OF EVENTS

industry has to offer. Come on down to Heritage Hall from noon to 6 pm to put a great finish on your Lexington Craft Beer Week. Whiskey Bear is hosting Bourbon 101 with Tim Knittel of Distilled Living on May 19 at 2 pm. Kitchens of the Bluegrass Tour is May 19-20.

THURSDAY MAY 31

Vintage Market Days of Lexington will be at the Kentucky Horse Park May 25-27. Vintage Market Days is an upscale vintage-inspired indoor/ outdoor market featuring original art, antiques, handmade treasures, home décor, outdoor furnishings, seasonal plantings and more.

The Great American Brass Festival preserves brass band music and explores its cultural influences through a variety of programs and presentations, featuring the best brass musicians in the world. May 31 through June 3 in Danville, KY. St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Country Fair 2018 starts on May 31 and runs through June 3. It will include the annual Run for the Nun 5k, live music through the weekend, a country fair carnival, funnelcakes, and one of Lexington’s largest annual family yard sales.

SATURDAY MAY 26

On May 26 at 10 am, Keeneland hosts the 2018 Thoroughbred Car Show. Poolapalooza at Southland Aquatic Center is on May 26 from noon to 4 pm to kick off the pool season. The City’s other aquatic centers open for the season as well, including Castlewood, Tates Creek and Woodland.

On May 19, Nelly is live in concert featuring Bone Thugs-n-Harmony and Juvenile, at Whitaker Bank Ballpark at 6 pm. The Kentucky Sheep & Fiber Festival, a natural fiber and local food event, will be at Masterson Station Park May 19-20. This event showcases some of the nation’s best fiber artists as well as offer workshops, demonstrations, and vendors with supplies for knitting, spinning, weaving, dyeing and crocheting.

SUNDAY MAY 20

The transformative power of ideas will be the focus of ONE: The Alltech Ideas Conference 2018. Explore how ideas can germinate into innovations that change the course of businesses and lives. May 20-22 at Rupp Arena, come network, hear world-class speakers, and gain experience and inspiration.

FRIDAY MAY 25

The Glo Run Night Race 5K & 10K is at the Kentucky Horse Park on May 25 at 9:20 pm.

Run, walk, and wag at the 2018 Woodford Wag on May 26. Sign up for the 5K cross country race or the 2K dog walk and enjoy the trails around Falling Springs Park in Versailles. This event benefits Woodford Humane Society. For safety reasons, dogs are not allowed on the 5K course.

MONDAY MAY 28

May 28 is Memorial Day, honoring the men and women who died while serving in the U.S. military. Visit HamburgJournal.com to see what’s open and what’s closed.


HAMBURGJOURNAL.COM

May 2018 | 21

HOME AND GARDEN

THURSDAY MAY 3

Wild Ones is having their Native Plant Exchange on May 3 at St. Michael the Archangel Episcopal Church. Items to be exchanged can be seeds, perennials, grasses and sedges, shrubs, trees or vines. The plants must be native to the Eastern United States.

SATURDAY MAY 5

Join the Friends of the Arboretum on May 5 for the Spring Plant Exchange at 9 am.

THURSDAY MAY 10

Headley-Whitney Museum of Art hosts its annual “Garden Affair.” It begins with a preview party on Thursday night and runs through the weekend with lectures, vendors, food trucks, workshops and children’s activities. Jon Carloftis Fine Gardens has returned to his Kentucky roots, and invites the Bourbon Women Association to an exclusive bourbon-in-the-gardenparty at his historic Lexington home, Botherum, on May 10. Carloftis, is one of America’s pioneers in rooftop and small-space gardening. Over the last 25 years, he has designed gardens and outdoor spaces that have been featured in Garden & Gun, Sophisticated Living, Southern Living, and In Style magazines.

sale from 9 am to noon at Woodland Christian Church. GO Local 2018 is an annual community service blitz led by Crossroads. People from the community partner with local non-profit organizations and other churches to serve them through projects such as painting, gardening, landscaping, construction, and more. Pick your project and make plans for your entire family for a fun, highenergy weekend on May 12-13. Bees in your Backyard Workshop, 10 am, Gardenside Park. Join Kentucky State Apiarist, Tammy Horn for this family-friendly workshop. Bluegrass Iris Society hosts its Annual Iris Show on May 12 from 1 to 4 pm at the Lexington Green Mall. This year’s theme is “Pretty as a Picture.” Kentucky Children’s Garden at the Arboretum hosts “Beginning to Garden” on May 12. Go on a short tour of the Home Demonstration Garden, create a fairy garden, then plant seeds to grow. An event for the Lexington Family Nature Club.

SATURDAY MAY 19

Kitchens of the Bluegrass Tour is May 19-20.

FRIDAY MAY 25

SATURDAY MAY 12

On May 12, the Down to Earth Garden Club holds a community benefit plant

Vintage Market Days of Lexington will be at the Kentucky Horse Park May 25-27. Vintage Market Days is an upscale vintage-inspired indoor/ outdoor market featuring original art, antiques, handmade treasures, home décor, outdoor furnishings, seasonal plantings and more.


22 | May 2018

SPRING REAL ESTATE TRENDS IN LEXINGTON

Real estate sales by members of the Lexington-Bluegrass Association of REALTORS® (LBAR) positively impacted the Bluegrass economy as of March 31, 2018 with 2,531 reported sales totaling $495,904,009.

According to 2018 LBAR President John Groft, “Climbing out of winter has taken more time than usual for much of the area, but house hunting should finally be taking center stage for many buyers. In March, sellers received 97% of their list price and remain willing to list their home due to the increased median sales price and decreased days on market. Additionally the healthy U.S. economy and labor market are creating a sizeable interest in buying a home in early 2018.” The first quarter residential single family sales decreased five percent from 2,487 sales in first quarter 2017 to 2,361 sales in first quarter 2018. The residential median sales price increased 10 percent from $150,000 in first quarter 2017 to $165,000 in first quarter 2018. The residential average

40505

days on market decreased nine percent from 69 days in first quarter 2017 to 63 days in first quarter 2018. The townhouses/condos sales decreased three percent from 176 sales in first quarter 2017 to 170 sales in first quarter 2018. The townhouses/condos median sales price increased 15 percent from $127,250 in first quarter 2017 to $145,750 in first quarter 2018. The townhouses/condos average days on market increased 25 percent from 64 days in first quarter 2017 to 80 days in first quarter 2018. March total sales activity decreased two percent with 1,060 sales reported closed in March 2017 compared to 1,042 sales reported closed in March 2018. Of the 1,042 sales 269 sales were to first time homebuyers and 111 sales were to out of state buyers. Residential sales decreased three percent from 999 sales closed in March 2017 compared to 974 sales closed in March 2018. Pending sales for March decreased nine percent from 1,458 pending in March 2017 to

HAMBURGJOURNAL.COM 1,323 pending in March 2018. This is the fourth consecutive month with decreased pending sales. The residential average days on market decreased six percent from 68 in March 2017 to 64 days in March 2018. The residential median sales price increased eight percent from $155,350 in March 2017 to $168,200 in March 2018. Townhouses/condos sales increased 11 percent from 61 sales reported closed in March 2017 to 68 sales reported closed in March 2018. The townhouses/condos median sales price decreased eight percent from $143,250 in March 2017 to $132,500 in March 2018. The average days on market decreased 34 percent from 70 in March 2017 to 46 days in March 2018. President Groft continues, “Realtors continue to note that entry-level homes for first-timers are hard to come by, which is contributing to their underperforming share of overall sales in the first quarter of the year. Even with the expected uptick in new listings in coming months, buyers in most markets will likely have to act fast on any available listing that checks all their boxes. New listings decreased in March 2018 with a total of 1,555 new listings with 3.1 months of inventory.”

The Lexington-Bluegrass Association of REALTORS® has announced Justin Landon as CEO. Landon was chosen after a nationwide search and joined the local association this Spring. “Justin will be responsible for leading the association to the next level, building on the solid foundation and momentum achieved under the leadership of former CEO Elaine Hangis,” said John Groft, LBAR 2018 President.

REAL ESTATE: Properties recently sold in 40505 and 40509

19-Mar-18............................ 1806 CANTRILL DR ....................................$266,000

27-Mar-18 ........................... 1746 BRYAN STATION RD.......................... $240,000

02-Mar-18 ........................... 1449 BRYAN AVE ........................................$220,000 28-Mar-18 ........................... 1803 CANTRILL DR .....................................$200,000 12-Mar-18 ........................... 464 ROOKWOOD PKWY ............................$185,000 28-Mar-18............................ 1611 RALEIGH RD .....................................$178,000

06-Mar-18 ........................... 1840 GAYLE DR ..........................................$175,100

23-Mar-18 ........................... 591 CRICKLEWOOD DR............................. $175,000

22-Mar-18............................ 756 FAULKNER AVE.................................. $166,000

30-Mar-18 ........................... 159 E LOUDON AVE ......................................$91,000 05-Apr-18 ........................... 2306 PIERSON DR ........................................$76,392 16-Mar-18 ........................... 602 GAY PL ....................................................$72,500 30-Mar-18 ........................... 168 BEVERLY AVE........................................ $66,000

28-Mar-18 ........................... 2092 SPRING STATION DR ..........................$61,334 26-Mar-18 ........................... 406 E LOUDON AVE ......................................$59,000 28-Mar-18 ........................... 107 TWELFTH ST ..........................................$40,000

40509

26-Mar-18 ........................... 3740 HORSEMINT TRL ...............................$590,000

29-Mar-18............................ 3805 HORSEMINT TRL.............................. $535,000

28-Mar-18 ........................... 749 KINGSTON RD .....................................$150,000

29-Mar-18............................ 3433 CHESTNUT HILL LN .........................$515,000

30-Mar-18 ........................... 1705 BILOXI CT $...........................................131,000

03-Apr-18 ........................... 1117 CHETFORD DR ..................................$485,000

30-Mar-18 ........................... 1984 GREENLEAF DR ................................$129,000

28-Mar-18 ........................... 2449 PASCOLI PL .......................................$450,000

27-Mar-18 ........................... 605 DARTMOOR DR ...................................$121,000

20-Mar-18 ........................... 928 STAR OF DANUBE WAY ......................$439,750

28-Feb-18 ........................... 156 GLENN PL............................................ $117,500

23-Mar-18............................ 2305 THISTLE PARK ..................................$363,000

06-Mar-18 ........................... 708 ZORN CT ..............................................$135,000 23-Mar-18 ........................... 1805 COURTLAND DR ................................$129,000

06-Apr-18 ........................... 141 AVON AVE $.............................................128,000

30-Mar-18............................ 1188 SHEFFIELD PL ..................................$510,000

19-Mar-18............................ 3252 BRIGHTON PLACE DR .....................$460,000

16-Mar-18 ........................... 1965 COVINGTON DR ................................$447,000

16-Mar-18 ........................... 508 GLENBROOK ST .................................. $118,500

19-Mar-18 ........................... 1955 COVINGTON PT................................. $367,815

21-Mar-18 ........................... 129 BEVERLY AVE ...................................... $115,000

14-Mar-18 ........................... 3183 BAY SPRINGS PARK......................... $354,364

14-Mar-18 ........................... 1000 DARLEY DR........................................ $107,399

29-Mar-18 ........................... 1956 COVINGTON PT .................................$339,900


HAMBURGJOURNAL.COM

May 2018 | 23

Spring into action! Call today for your free lawn and landscape consultation.

(859) 576-4545 -Residential and commercial mowing. -Residential landscape design and makeovers. -Custom-built raised beds.

www. fayettecountylandscaping.com

REAL ESTATE: Properties recently sold in 40505 and 40509 06-Apr-18............................ 4155 SPERLING DR ...................................$321,374

23-Mar-18 ........................... 1133 MORNING SIDE DR ...........................$198,750

27-Mar-18 ........................... 3573 POLO CLUB BLVD .............................$320,000

23-Mar-18 ........................... 1133 MORNING SIDE DR ...........................$198,750

23-Mar-18 ........................... 2008 COVINGTON DR................................ $303,645

20-Mar-18............................ 212 FOREST HILL DR.................................$185,000

23-Mar-18............................ 1568 SWEET CLOVER PARK ....................$299,900

23-Mar-18 ........................... 4044 BACOPA PL.........................................$162,500

28-Mar-18 ........................... 1710 AMETHYST WAY ................................$319,900

04-Apr-18 ........................... 3262 TRANQUILITY PT ...............................$302,766 15-Mar-18 ........................... 4449 HOLMES WAY ....................................$275,000

29-Mar-18 ........................... 4409 TURTLE CREEK WAY ........................$271,500 26-Mar-18 ........................... 1054 MARCO LN .........................................$269,900 27-Mar-18 ........................... 4740 LARKHILL LN ......................................$269,000

06-Mar-18 ........................... 2406 OGDEN WAY.......................................$192,200

06-Apr-18 ........................... 2357 ICE HOUSE WAY.................................$182,000 29-Mar-18............................ 2622 CALGARY...........................................$159,900

28-Mar-18 ........................... 2477 ARISTOCRACY CIR............................$159,000 06-Apr-18 ........................... 765 RAMBLING CREEK DR ........................$155,000 16-Mar-18 ........................... 2956 POLO CLUB BLVD............................. $146,500

30-Mar-18............................ 2276 ICE HOUSE WAY $................................252,000

20-Mar-18 ........................... 2504 CHECKERBERRY DR........................ $144,000

31-Jan-18 ........................... 3690 POLO CLUB BLVD .............................$247,500

29-Mar-18............................ 2601 CRYSTAL FALLS RD......................... $134,000

30-Mar-18 ........................... 2041 FALLING LEAVES LN .........................$249,900

02-Apr-18 ........................... 3364 BAY SPRINGS PARK .........................$241,000 22-Mar-18 ........................... 605 GOLF TOWN CIR .................................$238,000 26-Mar-18 ........................... 980 JOUETT CREEK DR .............................$235,000

21-Mar-18 ........................... 1124 MORNING SIDE DR ...........................$139,500 29-Mar-18............................ 408 CHELSEA WOODS DR....................... $132,000 27-Mar-18 ........................... 337 MULBERRY DR .................................... $116,000

23-Mar-18 ........................... 317 BAINBRIDGE DR UNIT G ..................... $115,000

23-Mar-18............................ 300 ISABELLA LN .......................................$230,000

14-Mar-18............................ 307 SANTA FE CT ......................................$108,500

30-Mar-18 ........................... 959 STAR SHOOT PKWY ...........................$224,500

23-Mar-18 ........................... 3034 BONANZA DR .....................................$103,150

23-Mar-18............................ 3208 BLEDSOE PL..................................... $230,000 21-Mar-18 ........................... 641 STANSBERRY CV ................................$221,000

23-Feb-18 ........................... 4203 WINCHESTER RD .............................. $211,600

06-Apr-18 ........................... 1704 LUCCA CT ..........................................$107,800 30-Mar-18............................ 2800 FIRENZE PARK ...................................$86,500 05-Apr-18 ........................... 3533 POLO CLUB BLVD ...............................$67,500


24 | May 2018

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